4.6 Review

The Development and Treatment of Lymphatic Dysfunction in Cancer Patients and Survivors

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers12082280

Keywords

lymphedema; lymphatic imaging; near-infrared fluorescence imaging; indocyanine green; breast cancer-related lymphedema; head and neck cancer

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA201487, R01 HL092923]

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Breast-cancer-acquired lymphedema is routinely diagnosed from the appearance of irreversible swelling that occurs as a result of lymphatic dysfunction. Yet in head and neck cancer survivors, lymphatic dysfunction may not always result in clinically overt swelling, but instead contribute to debilitating functional outcomes. In this review, we describe how cancer metastasis, lymph node dissection, and radiation therapy alter lymphatic function, as visualized by near-infrared fluorescence lymphatic imaging. Using custom gallium arsenide (GaAs)-intensified systems capable of detecting trace amounts of indocyanine green administered repeatedly as lymphatic contrast for longitudinal clinical imaging, we show that lymphatic dysfunction occurs with cancer progression and treatment and is an early, sub-clinical indicator of cancer-acquired lymphedema. We show that early treatment of lymphedema can restore lymphatic function in breast cancer and head and neck cancer patients and survivors. The compilation of these studies provides insights to the critical role that the lymphatics and the immune system play in the etiology of lymphedema and associated co-morbidities.

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